Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA young man returning home to attend a wedding hooks up with a drifter who turns out to be a violent bank robber. Before he knows it, the man finds himself involved in the robber's plans.A young man returning home to attend a wedding hooks up with a drifter who turns out to be a violent bank robber. Before he knows it, the man finds himself involved in the robber's plans.A young man returning home to attend a wedding hooks up with a drifter who turns out to be a violent bank robber. Before he knows it, the man finds himself involved in the robber's plans.
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Elenco
- Governor's Driver
- (as James Lovelett)
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Doyle Kennedy(Matt Dillon) helps Wade Corey (Andrew McCarthy) onto a train cart as a result of him having trouble with his car. While in the train cart, instead of heading up to a friend's wedding up in New York, Wade consciously decides to allow Doyle to manipulate him to visit his hometown of "Kansas"-hence the title. It is there, Doyle goes on a robbing spree in which he first breaks into a family's house to robbing the town bank. Once they split up as a result of being sought after, Wade then hides the money before saving the governor's daughter. Doyle then goes on a tracking rant to locate Wade to demand for his share for the money. It is during then after they split up, he crosses paths with his love interest, Lori Baykes (Leslie Hope) whose father owns a farm. I've like seen better.
Nevertheless McCarthy decided because he was a romantic he'd like to try bumming rides in freight cars on the railroad maybe because you meet such interesting people. In McCarthy's case he meets an amiable Matt Dillon going home to Kansas and the small town he grew up in.
Dillon might seem amiable, but he soon enough gets McCarthy involved in a bank robbery and the two are fleeing. McCarthy has the loot and he buries it in a tree. But then on a heroic impulse he jumps in a river to save a drowning girl and the stranger is now a town hero.
In the meantime Dillon flees far enough and then turns around to get McCarthy and the money.
The tension in Kansas is whether McCarthy will be discovered as a bank robber just when things are going well for him. He's even taken interest in country girl Leslie Hope. Dillon on his return back shows what a truly sociopathic character he is with several acts of brutality.
Watching Kansas put me in mind of I Was A Fugitive From A Chain Gang and how Paul Muni got caught up in something he was really not involved in. McCarthy is a bit less innocent than Muni was. Still it was not an enviable situation.
Kansas is a well constructed film with very good tension buildup and helped by location shooting in the title state. McCarthy and Dillon acquit themselves in roles they are well type cast in.
I'd see this one when broadcast.
But this movie doesn't make sense in a lot of ways.
This is another one of those Hollywood productions that comes along every now and then, even then, that tries to show us how Americans not on a coast, live, work and think.
And it usually doesn't work.
And it certainly doesn't seem authentic or real.
This is also, yet again, another movie that proves the actors, no matter how great they are, are only as good as the material they are provided with.. Is Andrew McCarthy supposed to be salt of the earth or a scoundrel, or is he the Great Gatsby?
For most of this movie we can never tell and it's confusing and unconvincing in all directions.
Matt Dillon can play mean but here it just doesn't seem right.
The ladies all look way to dry, clean and made up with their hair down to be riding on horseback out in the backwoods somewhere.
It's funny because it seems the Brat Pack, at least some members of it were all taking grittier-sounding scripts and parts in this era to maybe distance themselves from that image.
You had Emilio Estevez and Demi Moore in Wisdom (1986).
You also had Judd Nelson and Ally Sheedy in Blue City (1986).
And then you have this. Though I don't consider Matt Dillon part of that group.
The actions of these characters just doesn't seem believable. Then or now.
Certainly there is much behavior in 80's films that seems creepy or even stalker-ish.
Then it was portrayed as romantically persistent.
There are often tiny actions taken here by characters here that is simply unsafe in any era.
Turning your back on a stranger.
Being alone with a stranger. Even provocative.
No.
Doesn't make sense when you try to dose it in reality and not just an actress with a leading man.
And the editing leads much to be desired.
A character is drinking with somebody at a bar. Next scene, he's under a bridge with that person stripped down to the skivvies.
Wait.
What?
What happened?
What's going on here?
We're not in Kansas anymore.
Or are we?
This was a total waste of Dillon and McCarthy in their prime.
McCarthy, coincidentally enough, has a documentary coming out soon about the Brat Pack called, Brats (2024).
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThis motion picture entitled Kansas (1988) was actually filmed in various locations in the American state of Kansas in the USA including Topeka, Overbrook, Edgerton, Lawrence, St. Marys and Valley Falls.
- ErroresCarnival manager says that after their current five day stay at the fair, they're headed to "AR-kan-saw City" (phonetic spelling) like the state, Arkansas. However, as any Kansan can tell you, it's pronounced "ar-KAN-sas City". Don't know why, but it is.
- Citas
Doyle Kennedy: I didn't do that bank alone. I had help. Wade Corey? The hero all you suckers have been goin' on about? He did that bank. He was my partner. Turns out he's more horseshit than hero. How do you like that for a little con?...
Nelson Nordquist: Where's the proof, Doyle? You expect me to print that?
Doyle Kennedy: Well, you go ahead and print what you like. I don't buy that shit. Newspapers and the truth... you make it up the same as the rest of us.
Selecciones populares
- How long is Kansas?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 2,432,536
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 1,274,742
- 25 sep 1988
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 2,432,536